Just Halabi's book OK for BGP test?

I am currently studying for the BGP test and I got Sam Halabi's "Internet Routing Architectures," which is supposed to basically be the "BGP Bible." However, it's a little dated being that it refers to MPLS as "an emerging technology" and seems to be almost too easy being that I already read half the book in 3 days. In the experience of those who have taken the BGP test, is this book sufficient? Because I was also thinking about getting BGP Design and Implementation as well if Halabi's book is not enough.

I would not use it as the only source for the BGP exam (as I haven't done it myself). The CLI syntax in the book is rather out of date and it lacks a number of features that appear on the blueprint/exam. You should get at least one more resource, preferably BGP case studies/config guides at cisco.com.

So it seems like the general consensus is that Halabi's book doesn't provide enough in the way of current BGP commands that exist in more recent versions of the IOS. BGP-4 Command and Configuration Handbook seems to take care of that, but what about BGP theory? Is there more needed in that area, or is Halabi's book still relevant in that respect?

So it seems like the general consensus is that Halabi's book doesn't provide enough in the way of current BGP commands that exist in more recent versions of the IOS. BGP-4 Command and Configuration Handbook seems to take care of that, but what about BGP theory? Is there more needed in that area, or is Halabi's book still relevant in that respect?

For theory, Halabi is generally fine as far as the architectures of BGP are concerned.

But as I've said before - it's a good idea to look over the BGP command guide, look for commands Halabi didn't cover, and then do some research into the use of those commands. The configuration guides on cisco.com will cover it adequately.

For theory, Halabi is generally fine as far as the architectures of BGP are concerned.

But as I've said before - it's a good idea to look over the BGP command guide, look for commands Halabi didn't cover, and then do some research into the use of those commands. The configuration guides on cisco.com will cover it adequately.

Ok cool, thanks for the help! That's why I still think this is the best cert forum on the Internet.

I am currently studying for the BGP test and I got Sam Halabi's "Internet Routing Architectures," which is supposed to basically be the "BGP Bible." However, it's a little dated being that it refers to MPLS as "an emerging technology" and seems to be almost too easy being that I already read half the book in 3 days. In the experience of those who have taken the BGP test, is this book sufficient? Because I was also thinking about getting BGP Design and Implementation as well if Halabi's book is not enough.

From what I've heard, ISP guys who deal with BGP on a daily basis and have worked in that capacity for a couple of years seem to think the IRA does a great job of bringing it all together (they have generally worked with all kinds of IOS versions, all of which are more recent than what you'd see on the exam )

As a single resource, it's probably not enough; but I haven't heard of anyone being asked to take the CCIP who wasn't already employed by a national ISP (Sweden)

From what I've heard, ISP guys who deal with BGP on a daily basis and have worked in that capacity for a couple of years seem to think the IRA does a great job of bringing it all together (they have generally worked with all kinds of IOS versions, all of which are more recent than what you'd see on the exam )

As a single resource, it's probably not enough; but I haven't heard of anyone being asked to take the CCIP who wasn't already employed by a national ISP (Sweden)

If what you say is true, I should be fine then. I work with BGP a few times a day at work, working for a national ISP.

Those two are the exact resources for books that I am currently using. I additionally am thinking about picking up either the O'Reilly BGP book or BGP Design and Implementation.

For video resources I am using Internetwork Expert's BGP bootcamp which is pretty good.

Thanks Ryan, I have the O'Reilly BGP and BGP Design & Implementation books in my amazon shopping cart but I haven't pulled the trigger yet as I wasn't sure if they would "directly" help me with passing this exam. I'm sure they make fine books on my bookshelf though!

I will check out Internetwork Expert's BGP bootcamp, I'm hoping it's not too much money....

Ok I just checked it out, LOL, wow it is $300.....

I must ask, how do you like it? Would you spend $300 again for it? Is it really informative or dry? Only because I will pay if it's really educational....

INE pretty much always has a ~30% discount going on. If you plug in the current discount it comes out to 206.50

Keith Barker is the instructor and is pretty engaging. I would spend the money again, but not if I had to eat Ramen noodles for a month or anything like that .

I haven't read them yet, but I believe the O'Reilly BGP and Design and Implementation books are probably more useful for the real world "why is it done this way?" design approach than directly helping with the exam. But again, I haven't read them so I can't say for sure.

INE pretty much always has a ~30% discount going on. If you plug in the current discount it comes out to 206.50

Keith Barker is the instructor and is pretty engaging. I would spend the money again, but not if I had to eat Ramen noodles for a month or anything like that .

I haven't read them yet, but I believe the O'Reilly BGP and Design and Implementation books are probably more useful for the real world "why is it done this way?" design approach than directly helping with the exam. But again, I haven't read them so I can't say for sure.

I think you're spot on regarding those books. That's what the reviews seem to mention. I'm going to be ordering them today along with Network Warrior.

$206 is much more bearable than $300....I'll see if I can find any coupons out there....

INE pretty much always has a ~30% discount going on. If you plug in the current discount it comes out to 206.50

Keith Barker is the instructor and is pretty engaging. I would spend the money again, but not if I had to eat Ramen noodles for a month or anything like that .

I haven't read them yet, but I believe the O'Reilly BGP and Design and Implementation books are probably more useful for the real world "why is it done this way?" design approach than directly helping with the exam. But again, I haven't read them so I can't say for sure.

The command and configuration guide is the perfect complement to halabi's book. Work through the scenarios halabi presents in his book, that will give you a solid understanding of BGP fundamentals. Then look through the command and configuration guide for any commands halabi didn't cover and learn them. If you ever take the BGP exam, at least in it's current state, you will be glad you did this.

The command and configuration guide is the perfect complement to halabi's book. Work through the scenarios halabi presents in his book, that will give you a solid understanding of BGP fundamentals. Then look through the command and configuration guide for any commands halabi didn't cover and learn them. If you ever take the BGP exam, at least in it's current state, you will be glad you did this.

Appreciate the advice, I plan to methodologically go over any labs presented to me. I will also blog about them too as that will help me to better understand the concepts. Doing it is one thing, but being able to explain it is the half IMO.

I've been working with BGP for about 3-4 weeks now. I plan to put in another 4 weeks of studying.

Depending on where I am, I hope I can take the BGP exam somewhere in the middle of March....

The command and configuration guide is the perfect complement to halabi's book. Work through the scenarios halabi presents in his book, that will give you a solid understanding of BGP fundamentals. Then look through the command and configuration guide for any commands halabi didn't cover and learn them. If you ever take the BGP exam, at least in it's current state, you will be glad you did this.

I've definitely realized this, that's for sure. I finished Halabi's book, taking notes along the way, then I typed up a study guide for myself that put everything that I thought I needed to work on into everyday verbiage that I would use, and then labbed everything in the book out at least 3-4 times and went over my study guide for hours and hours. Then I went and looked at the exam blueprint again, and there's a bunch of stuff in there that Halabi never covered (what do I expect from a book written in 2001?) and realized I definitely needed another resource. So, I got the BGP-4 Command and Config Guide and it definitely looks like it's got everything I need. So, long story short for people who come across this thread in the future - read IRA and BGP-4 C & C and lab the heck out of everything and you should be good to go.

I am currently studying for the BGP test and I got Sam Halabi's "Internet Routing Architectures," which is supposed to basically be the "BGP Bible." However, it's a little dated being that it refers to MPLS as "an emerging technology" and seems to be almost too easy being that I already read half the book in 3 days. In the experience of those who have taken the BGP test, is this book sufficient? Because I was also thinking about getting BGP Design and Implementation as well if Halabi's book is not enough.

It is dated but certainly the sort of material you should be reading if you want deep understanding of the protocol and its application. A lot of books like this get passed by these days because they are not in and of themselves great primers for the actual test.

Started reading it and having read already about BGP in the ROUTE book, i can easily recognize some outdated stuff already, but the introduction chapter was very cool to read about, NSFNET and pre-1992 history!

When i've seen that the next chapters from the MPLS book will be "Advanced MPLS", i decided to switch to BGP, because i felt it was already advanced when i've read about LDP. There was some references to VRF's and MP-BGP which i don't know at all.

Started reading it and having read already about BGP in the ROUTE book, i can easily recognize some outdated stuff already, but the introduction chapter was very cool to read about, NSFNET and pre-1992 history!

When i've seen that the next chapters from the MPLS book will be "Advanced MPLS", i decided to switch to BGP, because i felt it was already advanced when i've read about LDP. There was some references to VRF's and MP-BGP which i don't know at all.

The Advanced stuff goes over MP-BGP and VRFs in detail. I got to mid chapter 8 of the MPLS fundamentals book then I decided to go back and refresh on BGP. I have IRA, and TCP/IP vol II.

I went through TCP/IP Vol II all ready and I just purchased the INE BGP class on demand. The instructor is Keith Barker who seems goofy but easy to follow. I'm only on class 6 out of 30 so I'll keep you posted and let you know if it's worth the $$$$

Just wanted to let everyone know that I took the BGP test yesterday and passed with a 925! Much higher score than I expected, that's for sure. For anyone who comes across this in the future, here's what I did:

1.) Read chapters 1-10 of Sam Halabi's Internet Routing Architectures and took notes along the way as I read, writing down things I knew I wouldn't remember or that I would need to go over again.

2.) Watched the CBT Nuggets videos for the BGP section of the BSCI test (I had them from way back when I got my CCNP).

3.) Read chapter 11 of Halabi's book, then labbed out all of the examples on my lab at home.

4.) Went through chapter 11, typing notes about each concept (advertise maps, suppress maps, etc.). I also included configuration examples for each one.

5.) Repeated steps 3 and 4 for chapter 12.

6.) Read the BGP-4 Command and Configuration Guide.

7.) Read the BGP Case Studies on Cisco's web site.

8.) Go over my notes for chapters 1-12 of Halabi's book over and over again until my eyes fell out of my head.

Thank you to everyone who weighed in on what materials to use for the test; it definitely helped me out a lot. Now, on to MPLS!